ID thieves “dox” Joe Biden, Jay-Z, Michelle Obama, and dozens more

The front page of exposed.su. Identity thieves have posted social security numbers, credit information, and other sensitive data belonging to more than a dozen politicians and celebrities. It’s a list that includes Vice President Joe Biden, FBI Director Robert Mueller, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, rapper Jay Z, and actor and director Mel Gibson. The website, exposed.su, surfaced on Monday with birth dates, telephone numbers, home addresses, and in some cases credit reports for a handful of politicians and celebrities. Throughout the past 24 hours the site has published details on additional individuals. Social security numbers for Mueller, Jay-Z, and Gibson appeared to be valid, the Associated Press reported . Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck, whose information was also posted on the site, hasn’t challenged the accuracy, either. Still, other journalists wrote that phone numbers purportedly belonging to former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and actor Ashton Kutcher reportedly went to a movie production company and a New York-based accounting firm respectively. The site included the image of a gaunt young woman with black circles around her eyes and an index finger in front of her lips. It was headed by a quote from the Showtime TV series Dexter , in which the title character says, “If you believe that God makes miracles, you have to wonder if Satan has a few up his sleeve.” The site included an embarrassing or humorous photo related to each individual whose information was disclosed. The act of publicly documenting the private details of people is known as “doxxing,” and it came into vogue a few years ago with the growing visibility of the Anonymous hacking collective. Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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ID thieves “dox” Joe Biden, Jay-Z, Michelle Obama, and dozens more

Get Six Months of Office 365 and 20GB Extra SkyDrive Storage for Free with an .EDU Address

Want to try Microsoft Office 365 but don’t want to pay for a subscription? If you have an .edu email address you can get up to six months of free access, plus an extra 20GB of SkyDrive online storage. More »

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Get Six Months of Office 365 and 20GB Extra SkyDrive Storage for Free with an .EDU Address

The Fangweng Restaurant

The Fangweng Restaurant in Hubei Province, China, is located conveniently near the popular Sanyou Cave tourist destination. But what may strike you as more impressive is that the eatery appears to hang on the side of a cliff! If you didn’t know this ahead of time, you might be surprised, because the entrance gives no clue. You must walk down a passageway that juts out over the Happy Valley of the Xiling Gorge to get to the dining hall. Once there, most of the tables are safely inside a cave, with just a few on a ledge over the chasm. Read about this restaurant and see more pictures at Spot Cool Stuff. Link -via the Presurfer (Image credit: Flickr user Reza Ahmed )

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The Fangweng Restaurant

Flash coming to Internet Explorer 10 on Windows 8 and RT tomorrow

Heads up, Windows users. Tomorrow, Microsoft will release an update for Internet Explorer 10 that enables Flash content in both Windows 8 and Windows RT . As many of you are likely aware, the “full web” experience has been limited to the desktop browser on Windows 8 up until this point, which was an intentional move by Microsoft in order to improve performance, battery life and the touch experience. With the update, Internet Explorer 10 users for Windows 8 / RT will be able to access Flash content on all but a few sites that Microsoft has selectively blacklisted due to their negative impact on the user experience. Naturally, users of IE10 within the Windows 8 desktop environment will still be able to access all Flash-enabled content, regardless of whether the site is on the blackballed list. Now that you’ve waited this long, what’s another day among friends? Filed under: Software , Microsoft Comments Source: MSDN Blogs

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Flash coming to Internet Explorer 10 on Windows 8 and RT tomorrow

Dating site Zoosk resets some user accounts following password dump (Updated)

A screenshot from Jeremi Gosney showing passwords cracked by the ocl-Hashcat-plus program. Jeremi Gosney Zoosk.com, an online dating service with about 15 million unique visitors each month, is requiring some users to reset their passwords. The move comes after someone published a list cryptographically protected passcodes that may have been used by subscribers to the website. In the past, the San Francisco-based company has said it has more than 50 million users . With this dump, a small but statistically significant percentage of the 29-million-strong password list contained the word “zoosk,” an indication that at least some of the credentials may have originated with the dating site. Jeremi Gosney, a password expert at Stricture Consulting Group , said he cracked more than 90 percent of the passwords and found almost 3,000 had links to Zoosk. The cracked passcodes included phrases such as “logmein2zoosk,” “zoosk password,” “myzooskpass,” “@zoosk,” “zoosk4me,” “ilovezoosk,” “flirtzoosk,” “zooskmail.” Other passwords contained strings such as “flirt,” “lookingforlove,” “lookingforguys,” and “lookingforsex,” another indication that they were used to access accounts at one or more dating websites. Many users choose passwords containing names, phrases, or topics related to the specific website or generic type of service they’re used to access. In December, Ars profiled a 25-GPU cluster system Gosney built that’s capable of trying every possible Windows passcode in the typical enterprise in less than six hours. . Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Dating site Zoosk resets some user accounts following password dump (Updated)

Mac malware that infected Facebook bypassed OS X Gatekeeper protection

Researchers have identified the Mac malware that infected employees of Apple, Facebook, and Twitter, and say it may have been used to compromise machines in other US organizations, including auto manufacturers, government agencies, and a leading candy maker, according to a published report. Pintsized.A is a new family of Mac malware that uses an exploit to bypass Gatekeeper, an OS X protection that allows end users to tightly control which sources are permitted to install apps , according to an article published Monday by The Security Ledger. Mac antivirus provider Intego says  the trojan masquerades on infected machines as Linux printing software known as cupsd, although it runs from a different location than the legitimate title. It’s unclear exactly how the malware gets around Gatekeeper. Once installed, Pintsized establishes a reverse shell to a command and control server controlled by the attackers. It uses a modified version of the OpenSSH utility to encrypt traffic, a measure that can help it remain undetected on infected networks. One of the domain names that hosted such a server was corp-aapl.com. It caught the attention of members of Facebook’s security team, tipping them off that there was an infected machine inside their network . When they later took control of the domain, they discovered multiple other companies were also compromised by the same attackers. Around the same time, Apple , Twitter , and Microsoft were also hit with attacks that meet the same pattern. Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Mac malware that infected Facebook bypassed OS X Gatekeeper protection

Remembering the Dead: The Bone House in Hallstatt, Austria

The other night, my friend’s mother lost her battle against cancer. He is a funeral director and owner of Elemental Cremation & Burial  in Seattle, and has dedicated his career to helping families during some of the darkest moments of their lives. He challenges the status quo in the American funeral industry, and looks for innovative and dynamic ways to memorialize the dead.  This post is for Jeff Jorgenson, in memory of his mother, Judy Burnett. For those who donate to MEDICINE’S DARK SECRETS in the next 48 hours, I will give 10% of the proceeds to the AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY .   Grief. It’s something that affects us all. And yet, we are so unprepared when it comes knocking on our own door. I have often said that as a historian of medicine, I am comforted in the knowledge that we are united with the past in our struggle against disease and suffering. The same can be said of our capacity to grieve, to mourn and to remember those whom we’ve loved and lost. There are countless examples around the world of places where the dead are immortalised in strange and unique ways. One of my favourites is the Beinhaus [Bone House] in Hallstatt, Austria. The Beinhaus came into existence in the 12 th century due to the lack of space in the small village’s cemetery. Graves were reopened after 10-15 years and the skeletal remains were moved to a charnel house to make room for the burial of the newly deceased. Beginning in 1720, villagers began bleaching the disinterred skulls of their predecessors by placing the heads outside in the sun for weeks at a time. In addition to the names of the departed, townspeople would paint elaborate floral patterns on the skulls in the way that one might decorate a grave with flowers today. Beside the cross in the center of the Beinhaus is a skull with a gold tooth. It belongs to a woman who died in 1983. Her last request was for her body to be disinterred and her skull to be placed in the charnel house. She was the last to enter the ossuary in 1995. For me, the Beinhaus symbolises our desire as human beings to remember those who passed before us—to hold on, in some way, to the lives that were lived—for those who were buried in Hallstatt, Austria, did not remain so forever. Far from being creepy, I believe it is a place of beauty; a place of peace; a place of reflection. And in a world where grieving is often marginalized, minimalized, even medicalized, it is no small wonder that so many people  visit the Beinhaus each year and feel in awe of the way this tiny village has encapsulated so perfectly the phrase: ‘dead but not forgotten.’

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Remembering the Dead: The Bone House in Hallstatt, Austria